Summary: John 3:16 is so simple and easily understood that sometimes we fail to understand how majestic and powerful it’s underlying message can be.

OPEN: I once read the story of a man had been driving on an out-of-the-way 2 lane highway running thru the rural countryside. He noticed an old tumbledown shack standing in the middle of an open field. He had to smile to himself as he read the crudely printed message on one whole side of the shack. Apparently, some young man had scrawled in large letters with a piece of chalk: "I love you - Kathy."

A few weeks later, as he drove down that same road, he looked in anticipation for that same romantic message. His disappointment was as great as his surprise.

Not only was the message gone, so was the barn. But his smile returned. Beside that field, on the back of a large road sign, scrawled in large white letters were the words: "I still love you - Kathy."

APPLY: John 3:16 is like that message. It is the message from God that He loves us – and that message seems to show up literally everywhere.

You’ll see it at football games, basketball games, on billboards along the road, on bumper stickers of cars, on paintings and statues.

ILLUS: I’ve even read about an eye doctor who has an eye chart in his office that – instead of traditional chart with the E at the top - has John 3:16 in letters with descending size. “Can you see this?” he will ask. While his patients smile, he sometimes has the opportunity to talk to them about the Lord.

Christians are totally in love with this verse because it seems to sum up so much of what the Bible teaches about salvation. It’s so popular that - when I visited sermoncentral.com – I found that there had been over 400 sermons dedicated to this text alone.

I’d even read once of a preacher who believed that he could preach every Sunday for the rest of his ministry simply on this text. I’m not sure I’m anywhere near that inventive. In fact, as I prepared for this Sunday’s message I found it difficult to think of anything to say that seemed to do justice to the simple majesty of this verse. And then… I decided to simply look at each part of the verse, and the power and depth of what I saw spoke volumes to me.

I. God so loved the World

This is the heart of the Gospel.

It isn’t us desiring to find God… It’s God desiring to find us, to embrace us, to claim us as His own.

1 John 4:10 declares: “This is love: not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.”

And 1 John 4:19 tells us “We love because He first loved us.”

(pause…)

And notice… John 3:16 says God loved the WORLD

ILLUS: There’s a commentator that I enjoy reading by the name of John Gill - but I was shocked by his interpretation of this verse. Commenting on this verse, he stated that “not every man in the world is here meant” (John Gill’s Expositor). Gill essentially maintained that God only loved the elect and that Jesus was only sent for them.

The problem with Gill’s interpretation is that it robs the verse of it’s power. It defrauds the true message of this passage.

John 3:16 doesn’t say He loved just the good looking people

It doesn’t say He loved just the rich and successful

It doesn’t say He only loved a select few of us….

It says GOD LOVED THE WORLD

That means everyone who is damaged by sin and deformed by the corruptness of the world around them.

ILLUS: This kind of love was beautifully described in story I read years ago by Mary Ann Bird. She wrote: “I grew up knowing I was different, and I hated it. I was born with a cleft palate, and when I started school, my classmates made it clear to me how I looked to others: a little girl with a misshapen lip, crooked nose, lopsided teeth, and garbled speech.

When schoolmates asked, “What happened to your lip?” I’d tell them I’d fallen and cut it on a piece of glass. Somehow it seemed more acceptable to have suffered an accident than to have been born different. I was convinced that no one outside my family could love me.

There was, however, a teacher in the 2nd grade whom we all adored – Mrs. Leonard by name. She was short, round, happy – a sparkling lady.

Annually we had a hearing test… Mrs. Leonard gave test to everyone in the class, and finally it was my turn. I knew from past years that as we stood against the door and covered one ear, the teacher sitting at her desk would whisper something, and we would have to repeat it back – things like “the sky is blue” or “do you have new shoes?” I waited there for those words that god must have put into her mouth, those seven words that changed my life. Mrs. Leonard said, in her whisper, “I wish you were my little girl.”

That’s what God says to every person deformed by sin, every soul damaged by worldliness.

“I wish you were my son”… “I wish you were my daughter.”

God so loved the World…He so loved YOU and He so loved ME…

II. … that He gave His only begotten Son

God cares what happens to us. He’s not some impersonal force that simply created the world and walked away.

Years ago, one of my favorite groups was “The Chad Mitchell Trio”. They were famous back in the days of the Kingston Trio and the Brothers Four. In one of their songs, they recited this poem:

God created the world in six days flat, then He said, I’ll rest

Then He let the thing into orbit swing

To give it a dry run test

A million years went by and then He looked at the whirling blob

He shook His head and then He said:

"Oh well, it was only a six day job.”

Now, that was funny to me at the time. But it speaks of a false concept.

God is not some impersonal force that set the world spinning ages ago and just simply walked away. He is the loving, caring God who stepped down from the security of heaven…

… became a living, breathing man

… knew hunger and thirst

… experienced friendship and love

… and also the rejection of men and the insults of those He created

… ultimately dying a cruel and excruciating death on a cross

Or as Philippians puts it:

“Christ Jesus: Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death— even death on a cross!” Philippians 2:5b-8

God didn’t send a servant to perform this task. He didn’t send a prophet or even an angel. This was so personal a gift… that God HIMSELF came in the flesh.

John 1:14 tells us that God “became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.

Jesus was God in the flesh. As the angel said to Joseph when informing of Mary’s pregnancy: “they will call him ‘Immanuel’ —which means, ‘God with us.’” Matthew 1:23

God so loved the World that He gave His only begotten Son…

III. …that whosoever should believe in Him should not perish but have every lasting life

John F. Kennedy once said “Our problems are man-made, therefore they can be solved by man.” Now, I realize President Kennedy hadn’t meant that to apply to our relationship with God… but that is the essence of all man made religion

All the other religions in the world essentially teach: Our problems are man-made, therefore they can be solved by man.

What are “our problems?” We do sinful things, think sinful things, say sinful things. And these evil actions, tho’ts and words create damage to our relationships and personal feelings of self worth that can destroy even the best person’s sense of peace.

One religion calls this “bad karma” and proposes that the way to deal with “bad karma” is to do “good karma” - deeds that counterbalance the wrongs that you’ve done in the past. In other words, they teach: “we made our own problems and we can solve our own problems.” All we have to do is do enough good to overcome the past.

And every world religion is build on that idea: If I do enough good deeds, then I can purchase peace and contentment. I can purchase God’s love. I can purchase God’s forgiveness.

BUT the prime message in John 3:16 is NOT that we can purchase God’s love, but that He loves YOU and He’s willing to purchase you with His own blood.

John 3:16 basically declares: Yes, your problems are man-made - and you made them! BUT you can’t be good enough to be good enough for God. There’s no way you can make your good deeds balance out that which you have done wrong in your life.

ILLUS: As I was mentoring a Boy Scout studying for his “God and Country” Merit Badge, this subject came up. I explained to him that most people have a picture in their minds of a giant balance scale. In their minds they visualize the weight of their bad deeds weighing down one side of the balance. And they believe that the only way to bring the scales back into balance is to do enough good deeds to place on the other side of the scales.

The only problem with that scenario is that the bad deeds - with their baggage of guilt and shame – are still there. They haven’t been removed. They’ve simply been balanced out. Eventually, the weight of their evil deeds can begin to break the scales and create moral dilemmas they can’t escape.

But God says: “I’ve got a better way. Let me remove the weight of those bad thot’s and deeds and statements from your life. Let me clear the scales of the shame and guilt that have weighed upon your conscience and give you a lightness to your soul.

But this isn’t something you can purchase from God. It is freely given. He loves you so deeply and has paid a price so steep that it defies the very idea that you could ever earn what He wants to give you.

ILLUS: David Morse, an American missionary to India became great friends there with the pearl-diver, Rambhau. Many an evening he spent in Rambhau’s cabin reading to him from the Bible, and explaining to him God’s way of salvation.

Rambhau enjoyed listening to the Word of God, but whenever the missionary tried to get Rambhau to accept Christ as his Saviour he would shake his head and reply, "Your Christian way to heaven is too easy for me! I cannot accept it.

If ever I should find admittance to heaven in that manner I would feel like a pauper there...like a beggar who has been let in out of pity. I may be proud but I want to deserve, I want to earn my place in heaven and so I am going to work for it."

Years later Rambhau invited Morse to his home saying he had something special to show his friend. There in his house, Rambhau showed Morse a small but heavy English strongbox.

Rambhau explained: "In a week’s time I start working for my place in heaven; I am leaving for Delhi and I am going there on my knees."

Morse responded "Man, you’re crazy! It’s 900 miles to Delhi, and the skin will break on your knees, and you will have blood-poisoning or leprosy before you get to Bombay."

"No, I must get to Delhi," affirmed Rambhau, "and the immortals will reward me for it! The suffering will be sweet for it will purchase heaven for me!"

The old man continued: "You are my dearest friend on earth, Sahib Morse. Through all these years you have stood by me in sickness, in want you have been sometimes my only friend. But even you cannot turn me from my desire to purchase eternal bliss....I must go to Delhi!"

"I have had this box for years," said he, "and I keep only one thing in it. Now I will tell you about it, Sahib Morse. I once had a son..."

“My son was a diver too. He was the best pearl diver on the coasts of India. He had the swiftest dive, the keenest eye, the strongest arm, the longest breath of any man who ever sought for pearls. What joy he brought to me! Most pearls, as you know, have some defect or blemish only the expert can discern, but my boy always dreamed of finding the ’perfect’ pearl one beyond all that was ever found. "One day he found it! But even when he saw it he had been under water too long.... That pearl cost him his life, for he died soon after."

The old pearl diver bowed his head. For a moment his whole body shook. "All these years," he continued, "I have kept this pearl but now I am going, not to return, and to you, my best friend I am giving my pearl."

The old man worked the combination on the strongbox and drew from it a carefully wrapped package. Gently opening the cotton, he picked up a mammoth pearl and placed it in the hand of the missionary. It was one of the largest pearls ever found off the coast of India, and glowed with a lustre and brilliance never seen in cultured pearls. It would have brought a fabulous sum in any market.

For a moment the missionary was speechless and gazed with awe. "Rambhau! What a pearl!"

"That pearl, Sahib, is perfect," replied the Indian quietly.

The missionary looked up quickly with a new thought: Wasn’t this the very opportunity and he’d prayed for to helpRambhau understand the value of Christ’s sacrifice? So he said, "Rambhau, this is a wonderful pearl, an amazing pearl. Let me buy it. I would give you ten thousand dollars for it."

"Sahib! What do you mean?"

"Well, I will give you fifteen thousand dollars for it, or if it takes more I will work for it."

"Sahib," said Rambhau, stiffening his whole body, "this pearl is beyond price. No man in all the world has money enough to pay what this pearl is worth to me. On the market a million dollars could not buy it. I will not sell it to you. You may only have it as a gift."

"No, Rambhau, I cannot accept that. As much as I want the pearl, I cannot accept it that way. Perhaps I am proud, but that is too easy. I must pay for it, or work for it..."

The old pearl-diver was stunned. "You don’t understand at all, Sahib. Don’t you see? My only son gave his life to get this pearl, and I wouldn’t sell it for any money. Its worth is in the life-blood of my son. I cannot sell this but I can give it to you. Just accept it in token of the love I bear you."

The missionary was choked, and for a moment could not speak. Then he gripped the hand of the old man. "Rambhau," he said in a low voice, "don’t you see? My words are just what you have been saying to God all the time."

CLOSE: “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosever should BELIEVE in Him should not perish but have everlasting life”

What does that mean? How do you “believe” in Jesus?

1st it means that you accept that He is the only Begotten Son of God – God in the flesh. And you accept that God loves you so much that He wants you to belong to Him.

2nd it means that you accept that YOU yourself can’t be good enough to be good enough for God. You have to recognize that you are a sinner who needs change in their life.

3rd it means you must accept Him as the Owner and Master of your life. He now has the right to decide the course of your decisions.

4th it means that you must be willing to identify with His gift by being buried in the waters of Christian baptism and rise up to live a new life in Him.

SERMONS IN THIS SERIES (“3:16 and Jesus”)

The Greatest Love - John 3:16-3:16

Why Was Jesus Baptized? - Matthew 3:1-3:17

The True Seed Of Abraham - Galatians 3:1-3:18

Is Jesus In Here? - 1 Timothy 3:14-3:16